Judy Watson Napangardi - HAIR STRING JW1713

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trips on foot back to (and lived for long periods at) Mina Mina and Yingipurlangu, her ancestral country on the border of the Tanami and Gibson Deserts. These places are rich in bush tucker such as wanakiji (bush plums), yakajirri (bush tomatoes), and wardapi (sand goanna). Most of her works depict Mina Mina or Dreamings connected to it: Karnta (Women), Kanakurlangu (Digging Stick), Ngalyipi (Snake Vine), Yunkaranyi (Honey Ant), Jintiparnta (Native Truffle) and hair belt.Judy was taught painting by her elder sister, Maggie Napangardi Watson. She commenced painting for Warlukurlangu artists for a number of years, developing her own unique style. She transmits her energy to her work through her dynamic use of colour, and energetic "dragged dotting" style. She is at the forefront of a move towards more abstract rendering of Jukurrpa by Warlpiri artists; however her work retains strong kurruwarri, the details which tell of the sacredness of place and song in her culture.

All of Judy's artworks portray the different stories associated with the sacred area of Mina Mina. For Millenia the Warlpiri women have visited the area to perform ceremony and ritual. In this story, Judy expresses the Hair String Skirt Dreaming. The cental motif in this painting is ceremonial hair bands, depicted as arc shapes on either side of the painting. The parallel lifeworks represent the landscape on each side.